Commit Graph

75 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Crichton
89b0e6e12b Register new snapshots 2014-06-15 23:30:24 -07:00
Jakub Wieczorek
f7d86b2f4a Remove the dead code identified by the new lint 2014-06-08 13:36:28 +02:00
Alex Crichton
550c347d7b rustuv: Deal with the rtio changes 2014-06-06 22:19:57 -07:00
bors
0a092a8158 auto merge of #14455 : crabtw/rust/mips, r=alexcrichton
Because IPv4 address conversion doesn't consider big-endian target, I add functions to handle that.
These function names may need to be changed, but I can't come up with a good one.
2014-05-28 02:41:44 -07:00
Richo Healey
1f1b2e42d7 std: Rename strbuf operations to string
[breaking-change]
2014-05-27 12:59:31 -07:00
Jyun-Yan You
abc2a92d9c fix MIPS target 2014-05-28 01:15:24 +08:00
Alex Crichton
19dc3b50bd core: Stabilize the mem module
Excluding the functions inherited from the cast module last week (with marked
stability levels), these functions received the following treatment.

* size_of - this method has become #[stable]
* nonzero_size_of/nonzero_size_of_val - these methods have been removed
* min_align_of - this method is now #[stable]
* pref_align_of - this method has been renamed without the
  `pref_` prefix, and it is the "default alignment" now. This decision is in line
  with what clang does (see url linked in comment on function). This function
  is now #[stable].
* init - renamed to zeroed and marked #[stable]
* uninit - marked #[stable]
* move_val_init - renamed to overwrite and marked #[stable]
* {from,to}_{be,le}{16,32,64} - all functions marked #[stable]
* swap/replace/drop - marked #[stable]
* size_of_val/min_align_of_val/align_of_val - these functions are marked
  #[unstable], but will continue to exist in some form. Concerns have been
  raised about their `_val` prefix.

[breaking-change]
2014-05-20 23:06:54 -07:00
Patrick Walton
ce11f19695 librustuv: Remove all uses of ~str from librustuv 2014-05-16 11:41:27 -07:00
Alex Crichton
f94d671bfa core: Remove the cast module
This commit revisits the `cast` module in libcore and libstd, and scrutinizes
all functions inside of it. The result was to remove the `cast` module entirely,
folding all functionality into the `mem` module. Specifically, this is the fate
of each function in the `cast` module.

* transmute - This function was moved to `mem`, but it is now marked as
              #[unstable]. This is due to planned changes to the `transmute`
              function and how it can be invoked (see the #[unstable] comment).
              For more information, see RFC 5 and #12898

* transmute_copy - This function was moved to `mem`, with clarification that is
                   is not an error to invoke it with T/U that are different
                   sizes, but rather that it is strongly discouraged. This
                   function is now #[stable]

* forget - This function was moved to `mem` and marked #[stable]

* bump_box_refcount - This function was removed due to the deprecation of
                      managed boxes as well as its questionable utility.

* transmute_mut - This function was previously deprecated, and removed as part
                  of this commit.

* transmute_mut_unsafe - This function doesn't serve much of a purpose when it
                         can be achieved with an `as` in safe code, so it was
                         removed.

* transmute_lifetime - This function was removed because it is likely a strong
                       indication that code is incorrect in the first place.

* transmute_mut_lifetime - This function was removed for the same reasons as
                           `transmute_lifetime`

* copy_lifetime - This function was moved to `mem`, but it is marked
                  `#[unstable]` now due to the likelihood of being removed in
                  the future if it is found to not be very useful.

* copy_mut_lifetime - This function was also moved to `mem`, but had the same
                      treatment as `copy_lifetime`.

* copy_lifetime_vec - This function was removed because it is not used today,
                      and its existence is not necessary with DST
                      (copy_lifetime will suffice).

In summary, the cast module was stripped down to these functions, and then the
functions were moved to the `mem` module.

    transmute - #[unstable]
    transmute_copy - #[stable]
    forget - #[stable]
    copy_lifetime - #[unstable]
    copy_mut_lifetime - #[unstable]

[breaking-change]
2014-05-11 01:13:02 -07:00
Alex Crichton
418f197351 Test fixes and rebase conflicts 2014-05-07 23:58:55 -07:00
Alex Crichton
b2c6d6fd3f rustuv: Implement timeouts for unix networking
This commit implements the set{,_read,_write}_timeout() methods for the
libuv-based networking I/O objects. The implementation details are commented
thoroughly throughout the implementation.
2014-05-07 23:29:04 -07:00
Alex Crichton
ec9ade938e std: Add close_{read,write}() methods to I/O
Two new methods were added to TcpStream and UnixStream:

    fn close_read(&mut self) -> IoResult<()>;
    fn close_write(&mut self) -> IoResult<()>;

These two methods map to shutdown()'s behavior (the system call on unix),
closing the reading or writing half of a duplex stream. These methods are
primarily added to allow waking up a pending read in another task. By closing
the reading half of a connection, all pending readers will be woken up and will
return with EndOfFile. The close_write() method was added for symmetry with
close_read(), and I imagine that it will be quite useful at some point.

Implementation-wise, librustuv got the short end of the stick this time. The
native versions just delegate to the shutdown() syscall (easy). The uv versions
can leverage uv_shutdown() for tcp/unix streams, but only for closing the
writing half. Closing the reading half is done through some careful dancing to
wake up a pending reader.

As usual, windows likes to be different from unix. The windows implementation
uses shutdown() for sockets, but shutdown() is not available for named pipes.
Instead, CancelIoEx was used with same fancy synchronization to make sure
everyone knows what's up.

cc #11165
2014-05-07 17:18:07 -07:00
Patrick Walton
090040bf40 librustc: Remove ~EXPR, ~TYPE, and ~PAT from the language, except
for `~str`/`~[]`.

Note that `~self` still remains, since I forgot to add support for
`Box<self>` before the snapshot.

How to update your code:

* Instead of `~EXPR`, you should write `box EXPR`.

* Instead of `~TYPE`, you should write `Box<Type>`.

* Instead of `~PATTERN`, you should write `box PATTERN`.

[breaking-change]
2014-05-06 23:12:54 -07:00
Brian Anderson
a5be12ce7e Replace most ~exprs with 'box'. #11779 2014-05-02 23:00:58 -07:00
Alex Crichton
6328f7c199 std: Add timeouts to unix connect/accept
This adds support for connecting to a unix socket with a timeout (a named pipe
on windows), and accepting a connection with a timeout. The goal is to bring
unix pipes/named sockets back in line with TCP support for timeouts.

Similarly to the TCP sockets, all methods are marked #[experimental] due to
uncertainty about the type of the timeout argument.

This internally involved a good bit of refactoring to share as much code as
possible between TCP servers and pipe servers, but the core implementation did
not change drastically as part of this commit.

cc #13523
2014-04-24 16:24:09 -07:00
Alex Crichton
58a51120a7 Update libuv
This update brings a few months of changes, but primarily a fix for the
following situation.

When creating a handle to stdin, libuv used to set the stdin handle to
nonblocking mode. This would end up affect this stdin handle across all
processes that shared it, which mean that stdin become nonblocking for everyone
using the same stdin. On linux, this also affected *stdout* because stdin/stdout
roughly point at the same thing.

This problem became apparent when running the test suite manually on a local
computer. The stdtest suite (running with libgreen) would set stdout to
nonblocking mode (as described above), and then the next test suite would always
fail for a printing failure (because stdout was returning EAGAIN).

This has been fixed upstream, joyent/libuv@342e8c, and this update pulls in this
fix. This also brings us in line with a recently upstreamed libuv patch.

Closes #13336
Closes #13355
2014-04-24 09:08:07 -07:00
Alex Crichton
e5d3e5180f std: Add support for an accept() timeout
This adds experimental support for timeouts when accepting sockets through
`TcpAcceptor::accept`. This does not add a separate `accept_timeout` function,
but rather it adds a `set_timeout` function instead. This second function is
intended to be used as a hard deadline after which all accepts will never block
and fail immediately.

This idea was derived from Go's SetDeadline() methods. We do not currently have
a robust time abstraction in the standard library, so I opted to have the
argument be a relative time in millseconds into the future. I believe a more
appropriate argument type is an absolute time, but this concept does not exist
yet (this is also why the function is marked #[experimental]).

The native support is built on select(), similarly to connect_timeout(), and the
green support is based on channel select and a timer.

cc #13523
2014-04-23 19:07:31 -07:00
Alex Crichton
5bfb260cf8 rustuv: Fix a tcp connect timeout bug on windows
When a uv_tcp_t is closed in libuv, it will still invoke the pending connect_cb,
and I thought that it would always call it with ECANCELED, but it turns out that
sometimes we'll get a different error code instead. Handle this case by checking
to see if the request's data is NULL and bail out if so (the timeout expired).
2014-04-19 21:39:30 -07:00
Alex Crichton
3915e17cd7 std: Add an experimental connect_timeout function
This adds a `TcpStream::connect_timeout` function in order to assist opening
connections with a timeout (cc #13523). There isn't really much design space for
this specific operation (unlike timing out normal blocking reads/writes), so I
am fairly confident that this is the correct interface for this function.

The function is marked #[experimental] because it takes a u64 timeout argument,
and the u64 type is likely to change in the future.
2014-04-19 00:47:14 -07:00
Richo Healey
919889a1d6 Replace all ~"" with "".to_owned() 2014-04-18 17:25:34 -07:00
Huon Wilson
54ec04f1c1 Use the unsigned integer types for bitwise intrinsics.
Exposing ctpop, ctlz, cttz and bswap as taking signed i8/i16/... is just
exposing the internal LLVM names pointlessly (LLVM doesn't have "signed
integers" or "unsigned integers", it just has sized integer types
with (un)signed *operations*).

These operations are semantically working with raw bytes, which the
unsigned types model better.
2014-04-15 19:45:00 -07:00
Alex Crichton
545d4718c8 std: Make std::comm return types consistent
There are currently a number of return values from the std::comm methods, not
all of which are necessarily completely expressive:

  Sender::try_send(t: T) -> bool
    This method currently doesn't transmit back the data `t` if the send fails
    due to the other end having disconnected. Additionally, this shares the name
    of the synchronous try_send method, but it differs in semantics in that it
    only has one failure case, not two (the buffer can never be full).

  SyncSender::try_send(t: T) -> TrySendResult<T>
    This method accurately conveys all possible information, but it uses a
    custom type to the std::comm module with no convenience methods on it.
    Additionally, if you want to inspect the result you're forced to import
    something from `std::comm`.

  SyncSender::send_opt(t: T) -> Option<T>
    This method uses Some(T) as an "error value" and None as a "success value",
    but almost all other uses of Option<T> have Some/None the other way

  Receiver::try_recv(t: T) -> TryRecvResult<T>
    Similarly to the synchronous try_send, this custom return type is lacking in
    terms of usability (no convenience methods).

With this number of drawbacks in mind, I believed it was time to re-work the
return types of these methods. The new API for the comm module is:

  Sender::send(t: T) -> ()
  Sender::send_opt(t: T) -> Result<(), T>
  SyncSender::send(t: T) -> ()
  SyncSender::send_opt(t: T) -> Result<(), T>
  SyncSender::try_send(t: T) -> Result<(), TrySendError<T>>
  Receiver::recv() -> T
  Receiver::recv_opt() -> Result<T, ()>
  Receiver::try_recv() -> Result<T, TryRecvError>

The notable changes made are:

* Sender::try_send => Sender::send_opt. This renaming brings the semantics in
  line with the SyncSender::send_opt method. An asychronous send only has one
  failure case, unlike the synchronous try_send method which has two failure
  cases (full/disconnected).

* Sender::send_opt returns the data back to the caller if the send is guaranteed
  to fail. This method previously returned `bool`, but then it was unable to
  retrieve the data if the data was guaranteed to fail to send. There is still a
  race such that when `Ok(())` is returned the data could still fail to be
  received, but that's inherent to an asynchronous channel.

* Result is now the basis of all return values. This not only adds lots of
  convenience methods to all return values for free, but it also means that you
  can inspect the return values with no extra imports (Ok/Err are in the
  prelude). Additionally, it's now self documenting when something failed or not
  because the return value has "Err" in the name.

Things I'm a little uneasy about:

* The methods send_opt and recv_opt are not returning options, but rather
  results. I felt more strongly that Option was the wrong return type than the
  _opt prefix was wrong, and I coudn't think of a much better name for these
  methods. One possible way to think about them is to read the _opt suffix as
  "optionally".

* Result<T, ()> is often better expressed as Option<T>. This is only applicable
  to the recv_opt() method, but I thought it would be more consistent for
  everything to return Result rather than one method returning an Option.

Despite my two reasons to feel uneasy, I feel much better about the consistency
in return values at this point, and I think the only real open question is if
there's a better suffix for {send,recv}_opt.

Closes #11527
2014-04-10 21:41:19 -07:00
Corey Richardson
0459ee77d0 Fix fallout from std::libc separation 2014-04-04 09:31:44 -07:00
Alex Crichton
9a259f4303 Fix fallout of requiring uint indices 2014-04-02 15:56:31 -07:00
Alex Crichton
f0ee509229 rustuv: Switch field privacy as necessary 2014-03-31 15:47:36 -07:00
Alex Crichton
bb9172d7b5 Fix fallout of removing default bounds
This is all purely fallout of getting the previous commit to compile.
2014-03-27 10:14:50 -07:00
bors
4443fb3cfa auto merge of #12855 : alexcrichton/rust/shutdown, r=brson
This is something that is plausibly useful, and is provided by libuv. This is
not currently surfaced as part of the `TcpStream` type, but it may possibly
appear in the future. For now only the raw functionality is provided through the
Rtio objects.
2014-03-13 21:06:34 -07:00
Alex Crichton
a63deeb3d3 io: Bind to shutdown() for TCP streams
This is something that is plausibly useful, and is provided by libuv. This is
not currently surfaced as part of the `TcpStream` type, but it may possibly
appear in the future. For now only the raw functionality is provided through the
Rtio objects.
2014-03-13 15:52:37 -07:00
Alex Crichton
7858065113 std: Rename Chan/Port types and constructor
* Chan<T> => Sender<T>
* Port<T> => Receiver<T>
* Chan::new() => channel()
* constructor returns (Sender, Receiver) instead of (Receiver, Sender)
* local variables named `port` renamed to `rx`
* local variables named `chan` renamed to `tx`

Closes #11765
2014-03-13 13:23:29 -07:00
Alex Crichton
cc34dbb840 Expose whether event loops have active I/O
The green scheduler can optimize its runtime based on this by deciding to not go
to sleep in epoll() if there is no active I/O and there is a task to be stolen.

This is implemented for librustuv by keeping a count of the number of tasks
which are currently homed. If a task is homed, and then performs a blocking I/O
operation, the count will be nonzero while the task is blocked. The homing count
is intentionally 0 when there are I/O handles, but no handles currently blocked.
The reason for this is that epoll() would only be used to wake up the scheduler
anyway.

The crux of this change was to have a `HomingMissile` contain a mutable borrowed
reference back to the `HomeHandle`. The rest of the change was just dealing with
this fallout. This reference is used to decrement the homed handle count in a
HomingMissile's destructor.

Also note that the count maintained is not atomic because all of its
increments/decrements/reads are all on the same I/O thread.
2014-02-12 09:46:31 -08:00
Niko Matsakis
844eab1940 librustuv -- fix unsafe sharing in rustuv 2014-02-11 16:55:24 -05:00
Brian Anderson
073b655187 std: Move byteswap functions to mem 2014-02-09 00:17:41 -08:00
Brian Anderson
d433b80e02 std: Add init and uninit to mem. Replace direct intrinsic usage 2014-02-09 00:17:40 -08:00
Alex Crichton
56080c4767 Implement clone() for TCP/UDP/Unix sockets
This is part of the overall strategy I would like to take when approaching
issue #11165. The only two I/O objects that reasonably want to be "split" are
the network stream objects. Everything else can be "split" by just creating
another version.

The initial idea I had was the literally split the object into a reader and a
writer half, but that would just introduce lots of clutter with extra interfaces
that were a little unnnecssary, or it would return a ~Reader and a ~Writer which
means you couldn't access things like the remote peer name or local socket name.

The solution I found to be nicer was to just clone the stream itself. The clone
is just a clone of the handle, nothing fancy going on at the kernel level.
Conceptually I found this very easy to wrap my head around (everything else
supports clone()), and it solved the "split" problem at the same time.

The cloning support is pretty specific per platform/lib combination:

* native/win32 - uses some specific WSA apis to clone the SOCKET handle
* native/unix - uses dup() to get another file descriptor
* green/all - This is where things get interesting. When we support full clones
              of a handle, this implies that we're allowing simultaneous writes
              and reads to happen. It turns out that libuv doesn't support two
              simultaneous reads or writes of the same object. It does support
              *one* read and *one* write at the same time, however. Some extra
              infrastructure was added to just block concurrent writers/readers
              until the previous read/write operation was completed.

I've added tests to the tcp/unix modules to make sure that this functionality is
supported everywhere.
2014-02-05 11:43:49 -08:00
Alex Crichton
94f2dfa8f6 rustuv: Require all results are used and fix fallout 2014-02-03 09:32:35 -08:00
Scott Lawrence
93e99b8be4 Remove do keyword from librustuv 2014-01-29 09:15:41 -05:00
Eduard Burtescu
15ba0c310a Demote self to an (almost) regular argument and remove the env param.
Fixes #10667 and closes #10259.
2014-01-27 14:31:24 +02:00
Salem Talha
cc61fc0994 Removed all instances of XXX in preparation for relaxing of FIXME rule 2014-01-26 14:42:53 -05:00
Alex Crichton
c6123ca105 rustuv: Re-work sockaddr glue to not use malloc
This means we can purge even more C from src/rt!
2014-01-20 13:32:45 -08:00
Daniel Micay
ae2a5ecbf6 handle zero-size allocations correctly
The `malloc` family of functions may return a null pointer for a
zero-size allocation, which should not be interpreted as an
out-of-memory error.

If the implementation does not return a null pointer, then handling
this will result in memory savings for zero-size types.

This also switches some code to `malloc_raw` in order to maintain a
centralized point for handling out-of-memory in `rt::global_heap`.

Closes #11634
2014-01-17 23:41:31 -05:00
Alex Crichton
c4d36b85a0 Fix remaining cases of leaking imports 2014-01-07 23:51:38 -08:00
Alex Crichton
afd4e2ad8d rustuv: Get all tests passing again after refactor
All tests except for the homing tests are now working again with the
librustuv/libgreen refactoring. The homing-related tests are currently commented
out and now placed in the rustuv::homing module.

I plan on refactoring scheduler pool spawning in order to enable more homing
tests in a future commit.
2013-12-24 19:59:53 -08:00
Alex Crichton
429313de69 rustuv: Reimplement without using std::rt::sched
This reimplements librustuv without using the interfaces provided by the
scheduler in libstd. This solely uses the new Runtime trait in order to
interface with the local task and perform the necessary scheduling operations.

The largest snag in this refactoring is reimplementing homing. The new runtime
trait exposes no concept of "homing" a task or forcibly sending a task to a
remote scheduler (there is no concept of a scheduler). In order to reimplement
homing, the transferrence of tasks is now done at the librustuv level instead of
the scheduler level. This means that all I/O loops now have a concurrent queue
which receives homing messages and requests.

This allows the entire implementation of librustuv to be only dependent on the
runtime trait, severing all dependence of librustuv on the scheduler and related
green-thread functions.

This is all in preparation of the introduction of libgreen and libnative.

At the same time, I also took the liberty of removing all glob imports from
librustuv.
2013-12-24 14:42:00 -08:00
Alex Crichton
39a6c9d637 Test fallout from std::comm rewrite 2013-12-16 22:55:49 -08:00
Huon Wilson
164f7a290e std::vec: convert to(_mut)_ptr to as_... methods on &[] and &mut []. 2013-12-15 23:37:41 +11:00
Patrick Walton
fd7a513bef libstd: Remove Cell from the library. 2013-12-10 17:55:09 -08:00
Patrick Walton
9a6ebbbecc librustdoc: Remove a couple of Cells. 2013-12-10 15:13:12 -08:00
Patrick Walton
7cac9fe763 librustuv: RAII-ify Local::borrow, and remove some 12 Cells. 2013-12-10 15:13:12 -08:00
Patrick Walton
786dea207d libextra: Another round of de-Cell-ing.
34 uses of `Cell` remain.
2013-12-10 15:13:12 -08:00
Kiet Tran
1755408d1a Remove dead codes 2013-12-08 02:55:28 -05:00